Sarah Jenkins explores the technological frontier of American industry, from AI deployment to domestic semiconductor hubs. She investigates how emerging tech is driving industrial modernization.
The United States adopts an annual review mechanism for USMCA, and rising trade policy uncertainty has prompted capital to accelerate its flow to high-quality U.S. manufacturing companies with domestic manufacturing bases and low cross-border dependence.
From British robotic dogs, AI internship programs to 3D printing defense applications, analyze how these technology trends foreshadow the accelerated path of digital transformation in US manufacturing.
Based on The Manufacturer's daily manufacturing news summary, analyze the dynamics of British industry in areas such as aluminum recycling, digital transformation, skills gap, and chip design, and explore the implications of these trends for the upgrading and supply chain restructuring of American manufacturing.
In May 2026, the number of new planned projects in the U.S. industrial manufacturing sector increased by 7.6% month-over-month, reaching 156. This article provides an in-depth analysis of three major drivers—policy, supply chain restructuring, and technology demand—along with the regional competitive landscape and industry benefits/pressures, revealing the logic behind the re-industrialization entering a new phase.
Bipartisan US lawmakers proposed the Semiconductor Advantage Act, extending CHIPS Act tax credits to space chip manufacturing for the first time. Microgravity environments can produce higher-quality crystals, but national security and export control issues remain unresolved. This move marks an extension of the US manufacturing race from the ground to orbit, potentially reshaping the landscape of the semiconductor and aerospace industries.